Authors: Marianne Williamson
ISBN-13: 9780684846224, ISBN-10: 0684846225
Format: Paperback
Publisher: Simon & Schuster Adult Publishing Group
Date Published: February 2000
Edition: Revised
Marianne Williamson is an internationally acclaimed lecturer, author, and spiritual teacher. The Age of Miracles hit number two on the New York Times bestseller list. Among her other nine published books, four of themincluding A Return to Lovewere number one New York Times bestsellers.
Marianne Williamson suggests reuniting the nation by returning to the first principles of our founding fathers.
Bludgeoning readers with grandiose good intentions, this exuberant exhortation by Williamson (Illuminata) to return to America's founding principles gives the sensation of being assaulted by a college roommate in the throes of a late-night epiphany. Williamson claims that in the "yang" of the Industrial Revolution and our subsequent technological and political expansion, the U.S. lost the "yin" spirit that suffused the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution. "We have the yang; we must reclaim the yin. We have the intelligence; we must retrieve our souls." Quoting Martin Luther King Jr. that the means of change "must be as pure as the end," she urges her readers to dare to be conduits of God's love. Williamson's desire to remind her vast readership of the courage and vision of the Founding Fathers and of the connection between social awareness and inner development is commendable, and she has a knack for rendering spiritual concepts in immediate terms ("Anger, like money and white sugar, is a temporary motivator of lower human energies"). Her sweeping generalizations, however, along with her tacit assumption of the banner of leadership, would probably bewilder Thomas Jefferson and company: "We are moving into new territory where we are unable to plug into our own energy sources unless we learn how to convert our thinking. We need adaptersfacilitators of the new consciousness...." And though she promotes the noble idea of turning "spiritual conviction into a political force, as Gandhi did in India and King did in the United States," she numbs with bombast rather than awakening us, as Gandhi and King did, through the living examples of their courage and commitment. (Sept.)
Preface | 13 | |
Introduction: Tough Minds, Tender Hearts | 19 | |
1 | American Renaissance | 31 |
2 | First Principles | 59 |
3 | The Resurrection of Conscience | 91 |
4 | Emerald City | 131 |
5 | Yin Activism | 167 |
6 | Holistic Politics | 243 |
7 | Home of the Brave | 307 |
App. A | Resources for Activism | 319 |
App. B | Founding Documents | 323 |
Selected Bibliography | 345 | |
Acknowledgments | 347 | |
Index | 351 |